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Bahrain court orders Shia opposition group to be dissolved

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Bahrain court orders Shia opposition group to be dissolved

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The headquarters of Bahrain’s main opposition party, al-Wefaq. Photograph: Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters

A court in Bahrain has ordered the country’s main Shia opposition group to be dissolved in a further crackdown on dissent in the strategically important western-allied kingdom.

The order against al-Wefaq marks one of the sharpest blows yet against civil society activists in the Sunni-ruled island nation, which was rocked by widespread protests led by its Shia majority demanding political reforms five years ago.

Bahrain, which hosts the US navy’s Fifth Fleet, crushed the 2011 protests with help from its larger neighbours, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates. But ongoing, low-level and occasionally violent unrest continues to agitate the kingdom despite reforms put in place following the Arab spring-inspired uprising.


Bahraini dailies al-Ayam and al-Wasat said Sunday’s ruling calls for the group’s assets to be liquidated and transferred to the state treasury. Al-Wefaq representatives could not immediately be reached, and government officials did not respond to a request for comment.

Brian Dooley, director for human rights defenders at the Washington-based Human Rights First, described the court ruling as the “government’s single most repressive act of the last five years”. He said: “Today’s decision is a dangerous mistake, leaving no real outlet for peaceful grievance left in Bahrain. The kingdom’s government has told its people that from now on not only are you not allowed rights, you’re not allowed to complain about it.”

Authorities suspended al-Wefaq’s activities and froze its funds last month, accusing the group of creating “a new generation that carries the spirit of hatred” and of having links with “sectarian and extremist political parties that adopt terrorism”.

Abdullah al-Shamlawi, a lawyer who had been defending al-Wefaq, said at the time that the order came “out of the blue”. He has denied all the allegations. He and other members of the defence team pulled out of the case after the judge refused to allow them access to al-Wefaq’s offices to prepare their defence.

On Sunday, he referred to media reports of the court ruling because, as far as he understood, no one was in court to represent al-Wefaq.

An appeals court in May more than doubled a prison sentence against the group’s secretary general, Sheikh Ali Salman, following his conviction on charges that included incitement and insulting the interior ministry. Other activists who were not already behind bars on earlier convictions have been targeted in recent weeks.

Prominent human rights advocate Nabeel Rajab was detained last month on a charge of spreading “false news” and has since received medical treatment for an irregular heartbeat. Activist Zainab al-Khawaja fled to Denmark after being released from prison on humanitarian grounds. Her activist father remains imprisoned on a life sentence for his role in the 2011 protests.

Authorities last month stripped the citizenship of the country’s leading Shia cleric, Sheikh Isa Qassim, prompting protests by his supporters. Officials accuse him of creating a sectarian atmosphere and of forming groups that “follow foreign religious ideologies and political entities”. That charge was an apparent reference to Shia powerhouse Iran, which Bahrain and its Gulf allies see as a destabilising rival stoking unrest in the kingdom. Iran denies interfering in Bahraini affairs. Its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has called the move against Qassim “blatant foolishness and insanity”.

The situation in Bahrain is raising alarm in Washington. A bipartisan group of US senators earlier this month wrote to the secretary of state, John Kerry, to express concern about the Bahraini government’s targeting of peaceful political opponents and civil society activists, saying the situation could destabilise the US ally, spark violence and encourage meddling by Iran. A state department report sent to Congress days earlier found Bahrain had fallen short in implementing political and human rights reforms recommended by an independent commission in the wake of the 2011 unrest.
 
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Same in Syria where majority are non shia and only 35 percent are Alvi sect backed by Iran.
In Bahrain despite brutality of the regime supported by Saudi Arabia people have held a peaceful protest and demanded their basic right through democratic process, unlike Syria they don't blow themselves up and didn't take gun .... In Bahrain unlike Syria there is no foreign terrorist to establish a caliphate .... or no one pours weapon and money or left its border open for foreigner to cross into the country to topple its regime .... so they ain't the same ...
In Syria Assad has expressed his readiness to step down if Syrian wouldn't vote him again in a fair and free election which in all Syrian parties participate , what about Bahrain?
 
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In Bahrain despite brutality of the regime supported by Saudi Arabia people have held a peaceful protest and demanded their basic right through democratic process, unlike Syria they don't blow themselves up and didn't take gun .... In Bahrain unlike Syria there is no foreign terrorist to establish a caliphate .... or no one pours weapon and money or left its border open for foreigner to cross into the country to topple its regime .... so they ain't the same ...
In Syria Assad has expressed his readiness to step down if Syrian wouldn't vote him again in a fair and free election which in all Syrian parties participate , what about Bahrain?
in syria the initial protest was peaceful but the government started killing protestors. the war started when most of the government forces rebel against the government due to its brutality. in bahrain people aren't bombed by government forces for protesting.
syrian army started the war against the cities where protests were held. the only country in the world who used tanks and artillary against peaceful protestors.
 
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In Bahrain despite brutality of the regime supported by Saudi Arabia people have held a peaceful protest and demanded their basic right through democratic process, unlike Syria they don't blow themselves up and didn't take gun .... In Bahrain unlike Syria there is no foreign terrorist to establish a caliphate .... or no one pours weapon and money or left its border open for foreigner to cross into the country to topple its regime .... so they ain't the same ...
In Syria Assad has expressed his readiness to step down if Syrian wouldn't vote him again in a fair and free election which in all Syrian parties participate , what about Bahrain?
Syrian regime is the most brutal in middle East. They didn't hesitate to massacre their own population in hundred of thousands.

ISIS and FSA are doing the same brutalities. But Asad regime has destroyed his country.
Asad regime even used chemical weapons again at innocent civilian population.
 
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in syria the initial protest was peaceful but the government started killing protestors. the war started when most of the government forces rebel against the government due to its brutality. in bahrain people aren't bombed by government forces for protesting.
syrian army started the war against the cities where protests were held. the only country in the world who used tanks and artillary against peaceful protestors.

This thread is allocated to Bahrain .. but as far as you mentioned Syria I would discuss it with you ...

First of all Syrian people protests like any other nations were peaceful no doubt in that but it doesn't mean some countries didn't provoke violence ...

Syrian-based Father Frans van der Lugt was the Dutch priest murdered by a gunman in Homs just a few weeks ago. His involvement in reconciliation and peace activities never stopped him from lobbing criticisms at both sides in this conflict. But in the first year of the crisis, he penned some remarkable observations about the violence – this one in January 2012:

“From the start the protest movements were not purely peaceful. From the start I saw armed demonstrators marching along in the protests, who began to shoot at the police first. Very often the violence of the security forces has been a reaction to the brutal violence of the armed rebels.”

In September 2011 he wrote: “From the start there has been the problem of the armed groups, which are also part of the opposition…The opposition of the street is much stronger than any other opposition. And this opposition is armed and frequently employs brutality and violence, only in order then to blame the government.”

Peaceful protest in Syria initiated in March 15 2011:
But back in March 10 2011 :
Syria says seizes weapons smuggled from Iraq
Syria: Weapons Intercepted
and of you read the news you'll see seizure of weapon took place on Monday while news was released on Friday , which means at least the seizure took place in March 6.... 10 days before protests ...

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"Al-Omari" mosque
On 23.March.2011, the Syrian National TV broadcast a video-report about seized weapons in "Al-Omari" mosque in the city of Daraa, just a few days after the beginning of the unrest.
At that time, the entire world accused the Syrian government of fabricating the report. However after more than one year, here they are admitting that the terrorists of Daraa stored weapons in "Al-Omari" mosque. BBC held an interview with "Anwar Al-Eshki", a Saudi Ex-Military (Major General) and now president of "Center for Strategic studies" in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. He reveals information about the first days in the Syrian crisis, and he even confirms his connections with the leader of the so-called "Free Syrian Army". They have become so rude and confident, so they admit everything publicly.

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In 2013 Anwar Eshki Saudi Major General through an interview with BBC Arabic admitted that the Syrian protests were armed from the first day .. not ordinary people but armed gang ... video

7 Syrian policemen killed in Sunday clashes, report
March 21, 2011

Seven policemen were killed during clashes between the security forces and protesters in Syria, Xinhua reported.They got killed trying to drive away protesters during demonstration in Dara’a town in which people demanded for reforms in Syria, Damascus Press news website reported.

Dozens of protesters attacked the communication centre and the national hospital.

Al-Jazeera TV reported Sunday that the protesters also burned the headquarters of the Baath Party and the court house in Dara’a.

Court.jpg
 
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The opposition is republican, not necessarily Shia. Bahrain has an absolute monarchy. Other than the 6 Gulf states, no country in the world has absolute monarchy. They have all been overthrown and replaced by democracy, either republic or constitutional monarchy.
 
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Well shall we say good riddance...Bahrain needs stability for industrial and private sector growth..and this nuisance party is out there to create trouble..
 
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Well shall we say good riddance...Bahrain needs stability for industrial and private sector growth..and this nuisance party is out there to create trouble..

No the problem is it could initiate a domino that could reach your borders ... don't bring industrial and private sector growth nonsense ... Al-Wefaq was the largest in parliament before its lawmakers resigned in protest at the crushing of 2011 protests calling for an elected government.

Al-Wefaq, also known as the Islamic National Accord Association, is heir to the Bahrain Freedom Movement which played a key role in Shiite-led anti-government protests in the 1990s that sought the restoration of the elected parliament scrapped in 1975.

Sunday's ruling comes despite appeals by the United Nations, United States and rights groups for the legal action against the bloc to be dropped.

Washington has labelled the crackdown on Al-Wefaq as "alarming" and repeatedly appealed for "reform and reconciliation" in Bahrain.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon had also expressed concern about the move against Al-Wefaq.

In recent months, Manama has intensified its crackdown on leading Shiite figures.

Al-Wefaq's chief, Shiite cleric Ali Salman, is serving a nine-year jail term for inciting violence after a court in May more than doubled his sentence.

His arrest in December 2014 sparked protests in Bahrain, already rocked by the Shiite-led uprising that erupted in February 2011.

Authorities have also stripped at least 261 people of their citizenship since 2012, according to the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, including the country's Shiite spiritual leader Sheikh Isa Qassem.

And on Tuesday, a court denied bail for prominent human rights activist Nabeel Rajab as he went on trial on charges of insulting a state institution and neighbouring Saudi Arabia online.

Amnesty International and Human Rights First were among international rights watchdogs that had viced concern over the legal proceedings against Al-Wefaq and the government's crackdown on opponents.


Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/afp/2016/07/bahrain-politics-unrest.html#ixzz4FIhHVSgo
 
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The problem that Bahrain faces is Iran intervention. Same like we have in Karachi and balochistan. And it's not Bahrain also Saudi Arabia UAE etc.
 
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The problem that Bahrain faces is Iran intervention. Same like we have in Karachi and balochistan. And it's not Bahrain also Saudi Arabia UAE etc.
You mean it was Iran which sent troops into the Bahrain and cracked down its people?
And when we intervened in Bahrain internal affairs?
 
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Well shall we say good riddance...Bahrain needs stability for industrial and private sector growth..and this nuisance party is out there to create trouble..
Nuisance party which happens to be majority of the country? These people have been holding peaceful protests for 5 straight years, and yet, in Syria, police officers were killed in fifth day of 'peaceful protests', government buildings torched down, soldiers beheaded. And people are calling the cannibal nutjobs in Syria as freedom fighters.

Aren't they nuisance in Syria? They are far worse than a nuisance actually, they are the worst animals planet has every witnessed in recent century.
 
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Suppressing the rights of peaceful majority will get increasingly harder. Govt should talk to the protesters instead of outright banning them.
 
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